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Transcript
AI and the Brain
Shailesh Appukuttan : 0933 0003
M.Tech 1st Year
CS344 Seminar
Image Source: http://www.interintelligence.org
An Artificial Brain
Ever since the modern computer
was
invented
people
have
wondered if the human brain
could be simulated, perhaps so
well that the organic brain could
be replicated in a machine!
Image Source: http://www.onlineinvestingai.com/blog/tag/markets/page/2/
The Brain
“The most complex thing we have yet discovered in
our Universe“
- James Watson
Molecular Biologist, Co-discoverer
of the helical structure of DNA
Image Source: http://haktech.blogspot.com/2009/11/
The Brain
 It is a product of many millions
of years of evolution
 Called a Neural Network of
neurons whereby individual cells
act as processors that share
information with other neurons
to produce thought. This idea is
the basis of Artificial Neural
Networks
Image Source: http://neuronarrative.wordpress.com/2009/03/16/
The Mind-Body Problem
Dualism…
 Mind, or Soul, exists separately from the Brain
 If the mind is separable from the brain, then true AI could
never be realized, as the something else (namely the mind,
spirit etc.) could never be realized in the physical object (the
computer)
Materialism…
 Mind arises from activity in the Brain
 The evidence for materialism is overwhelming
 Modern brain imaging techniques can detect brain activity
correlated with thought
Strong A.I. vs Weak A.I.
Weak A.I.
 Weak AI only claims that machines can act intelligently
 Machine intelligence need only mimic the behavior of human
intelligence
 Not intended to match/exceed the capabilities of human beings
Strong A.I.
 Strong AI claims that a machine that acts intelligently also
has mind and understands in the same sense people do
 Given the appropriate programming a computer actually
becomes a mind
 A.I. that matches or exceeds human intelligence
Can Machines Really Think?
“Not until a machine could write a sonnet or
compose a concerto because of thoughts and
emotions felt, and not by the chance fall of
symbols, could we agree that machine equals
brain….”
- (Geoffrey Jefferson, 1949, quoted by A. Turing)
Searle’s Criticism of Strong AI
John Searle
- A famous philosopher
Searle’s criticism of strong AI’s
analogy “Mind is to brain as
program is to computer”
seems justified since “mental
states and events are literally a
product of the operation of the
brain, but the program is not in
that way a product of the
computer”.
Image Source: http://www.nndb.com/people/457/000070247/
Artificial Intelligence
With the advent of the field of A.I., Philosophers and Scientists
debated about very fundamental and important questions like
– “Can machines think?”, “Is AI possible?” etc.
Alan Turing then formulated the question “Can machines
think?” into a test, which became famous as The Turing Test.
Image Source: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/
The Turing Test
If a machine can conduct a
conversation so well that people
cannot tell
whether
they
are
talking with a person or with a
computer, then the computer can
think. It passes the Turing Test.
Image Source: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/
Questions
Is there anything essential that a human being can do that a
computer could never do? Why?
Even if a computer can pass a Turing test, how do we know it
is really thinking as opposed to imitating or simulating
thought?
If the Turing test is not a good test for actual thinking, is there
any better test?
Searle’s Argument
Searle argues against both functionalism (the computer model
of mind) and the claim that a computer that passes the Turing
test would actually be thinking.
He does so by using a counter-example wherein a system
passes the Turing test, but is not at all thinking or
understanding.
It is called the Chinese Room Experiment.
Source: www.storobia.com/ai/philosophy/chinese-room.html
The Chinese Room
He does not
know Chinese
Chinese Writing is
given to the person
Correct
Responses
Set of rules, in English,
for transforming phrases
Image Source: http://pzwart.wdka.hro.nl/mdr/research/
The Chinese Room
Applet Source: http://www.mind.ilstu.edu/curriculum/searle_chinese_room/searle_chinese_room.php
Objections
The answers in Chinese that Searle produces are very good. In
fact, so good, no one can tell that he is not a native Chinese
speaker!
Searle has only conducted symbol manipulation, with no
understanding, yet he passes the Turing Test in Chinese.
Therefore,
passing
the
Turing
Test
does
not
ensure
understanding.
Source: http://www.mind.ilstu.edu/curriculum/searle_chinese_room/searle_chinese_room.php
Counter Objections
Searle is part of a larger system. Searle doesn’t understand
Chinese, but the whole system (Searle + room + rules) does
understand Chinese.
The knowledge of Chinese is in the rules contained in the
room. The ability to implement that knowledge is in Searle.
The system as a whole understands Chinese.
Source: http://www.mind.ilstu.edu/curriculum/searle_chinese_room/searle_chinese_room.php
Searle’s Conclusion
 Searle concludes that symbol manipulation alone can never
produce understanding
 Computer programming is only symbol manipulation
 Computer programming can never produce understanding
 Strong AI is false
Whole Brain Emulation
 Also knows as Mind Uploading
 An approach to Strong AI
 Often called as its Ultimate Goal
 Hypothetical process of scanning and
mapping a biological brain in detail
and copying its state into a computer
system
 Could lead to Immortality and
Parallel Existence
Image Source: http://www.futuretimeline.net/22ndcentury/2100-2149.htm
Why all the fuss?
“The question of whether a computer can think is
no more interesting than the question of whether
a submarine can swim.”
- Edsger W. Dijkstra
Computer Scientist
 Is an artificial Picasso painting considered a Picasso painting?
 Are artificial sweeteners sweeteners?
Distinction seems to depend on intuition
Extracted From: Stuart Russell and Peter Norvig, 2005
References
 Searle J. R. Mind, brains and programs. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 1980.
Marvin Minsky, Why People Think Computers Can’t, AI Magazine, vol. 3 no. 4, 1982.
 Searle J.R. Mind, brains and science. Harvard Univ. Press, Cambridge, 1984.
 Searle J. R. Is the brain’s mind a Computer Program? Scientific American, 1990.
 Stuart Russell and Peter Norvig. Artificial Intelligence – A Modern Approach. Pearson
Education, Second Edition, 2005.
 http://www.alanturing.net
 http://brain.web-us.com
 http://www.mind.ilstu.edu/curriculum/searle_chinese_room/searle_chinese_room.php
 http://en.wikipedia.org
Questions?
Image Source: http://www.legis.state.wi.us/senate/sen11/news/